Part of Wordle’s success is that it’s both easy to learn and difficult to master. Of course, luck plays a significant role, but as with many popular card games, the primary learning curve is figuring out how best to use that luck.
Fortunately, Wordle fans now have a new tool to aid them with that process. The new WordleBot tool helps players master the game by mathematically analyzing their performance.
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The New York Times acquired Wordle in January and created WordleBot to help players master the game. Accessible through a web browser, players can upload their most recent Wordle for the WordleBot to analyze. This requires opening both in the same browser on the same device, though players can also upload a screenshot and have the WordleBot scan that instead. It then goes line by line, choosing the words that make it to the correct answer with the fewest attempts, which usually work out to be about three tries. WordleBot then provides the user with various stats to help improve their performance.
WordleBot ranks the player’s overall game on a scale of 1 to 99 in the categories of luck and skill. It then does the same for each guess along the way. It also explains how helpful each guess was and why. For example, on Wordle number 257 from March 3rd, guessing the word “power” reduces the number of possible words from 2,309 to only 186. A second guess of “court” further narrows it down to two, though WordleBot notes this is primarily due to luck. Finally, WordleBot considers the guess of “fours” wasted since it didn’t add anything new beyond ruling out one option. At this point, the only possible answer is the correct word, “mourn.”
WordleBot also makes its own
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